Texarkana Gazette

Kyle Busch has 2 NASCAR titles and an eye on more

- By Jenna Fryer

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. — The way Kyle Busch sees it, there is a flaw in the championsh­ip ring NASCAR awarded him last month.

It lacks any indication that the 2019 title was actually his second championsh­ip. Busch wants it fixed so it displays exactly what he’s earned. He has studied the issue and knows the New England Patriots created a ring that showcases their six Super Bowl victories.

When his career is over, Busch wants just one ring to encapsulat­e his accomplish­ments. He insists he will close his career alongside greats Richard Petty, Dale Earnhardt and Jimmie Johnson.

But he doesn’t have seven Cup Series titles.

“Not yet I don’t,” Busch said with a wink.

Busch’s bid for a third championsh­ip doesn’t begin until Feb. 16 at the Daytona 500, a race he desperatel­y wants to win. Busch is 0 for 14 in “The Great American Race” with a bitter runner-up finish to Joe Gibbs Racing teammate Denny Hamlin in last year’s 1-2-3 Gibbs sweep.

He has won at every active NASCAR track except The Roval at Charlotte Motor Speedway yet his 56 career Cup victories do not include the Daytona 500. His warm-up begins this weekend at the Rolex 24 at Daytona, a twice-round-the-clock endurance race featuring champions from series all over the world.

The event is packed with Indianapol­is 500 winners, Le Mans winners and some of the most skilled drivers from global series. Busch is on hand to steal the show.

His longtime partnershi­p with Toyota got him the gig to drive a Lexus for the AIM Vasser Sullivan team, and Busch is the star attraction. He loves it, too, and at a January team dinner he wore that ring. For one night, he seemed as if he was that once-upon-a-time fun Kyle Busch.

He was just 16 when he first came into NASCAR in 2001, right as the series was passing a rule that sidelined him until his 18th birthday. He was brash even then — it’s some chip he and older brother Kurt have just always seemed to have, though he was tame compared with Kurt, the 2004 champion.

Kyle Busch has always done his best to speak the truth as he sees it, one sarcastic eye roll, thumbs-up or oneword answer at a time.

His opinions have not always been popular with NASCAR and it makes no difference whether he was right. The series “Car of Tomorrow” was terrible, he was just the first to say so. Many fans found him arrogant, entitled or whiny or a mix of all three.

His career has been golden: high-profile rides first at Hendrick Motorsport­s, then JGR, where he has been since 2008. Busch has 208 victories across NASCAR’s three national series, and some argue his tally equals Petty’s record 200 Cup wins. He would undoubtedl­y have dozens more if NASCAR had not set limits on how much he can compete in the lower series.

The way he wins, his brash celebratio­ns, his disregard for those who boo him and all those wins have made Busch something of a villain, and that doesn’t always put him in the best of moods. Toss in a bad day at the track, plus idle time each weekend because NASCAR only allows him a maximum of five Truck Series races (he went 5 for 5 last season) and seven in the Xfinity Series (4 for 7), and Busch can be a real bear.

So it was a very long summer, and a 21-race losing streak didn’t help. He lashed out in the opening race of the playoffs last September when he ran into the back of a lapped car and accused some in the field of not being qualified to race at NASCAR’s top level.

Busch says that incident is one of the reasons he is running the Rolex this weekend. His Vasser Sullivan entry is in the GT Daytona class, where Busch will be mired in traffic with slower cars and inexperien­ced drivers with the faster classes closing in on him. It will be chaotic.

“Cody Ware says he can’t drive and watch his mirrors?” Busch said referring to the lapped-car flap in September. “Watch this.”

Busch then flipped his middle finger.

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